A vehicle running 7.5 PSI will get better fuel economy than a vehicle running 15 PSI AT FULL BOOST. So, yes, you can get better economy, but only when you're in boost. When you're in boost, you're obviously not really concerned with economy.Finally a decent answer, although you didnt have to say it was a dumb question. All I wanted to know from the start was if I reduce the boost from what it is to 1/2 of what it is could I get better gas mileage.
Well it looks like I cant.
Most people say they get 2-3 more mpg. (I ain't got no CAI so I can't speak for meself.)...
In my last car a CAI actually got me better gas mileage, do you know how the mazdaspeed intakes do for the ms3?
ok ok, i get it now. If im going WOT alot and I reduce my boost then I will save otherwise if I drive fiarly regularly then it wont matter.
In my last car a CAI actually got me better gas mileage, do you know how the mazdaspeed intakes do for the ms3?
I see zero difference with the CAI. Didn't hurt economy, but didn't help it one bit for me.
Sounds entirely reasonable to me. Off throttle and in gear, the injectors shut off completely, meaning you are burning zero fuel.My son and I where trying to see how low we could get the mpg reading. How does zero sound. I do understand that the accuracy of the TC is questionable.
The trip computer is exact mileage and the fuel consumption monitor show averages. Fill your tank. Run for the entire tank as far as you dare. Fill up again. Subtract what you put in from what the capacity of the tank is. The number you get is what you had left after the first run. This lets you figure out how much fuel you burned. Calculate your average fuel consumption from that. Compare it to the fuel consumption average for that tank of gas. Your numbers are going to be very, very, very similar.Just wondering the methods in determining MPG's.
Why not? I bet over the life of my car I spend less on the MS3, insurance and fuel consumed than you do on the MS3, Prius, insurance and fuel consumed.People shouldnt worry about mileage in the first place when buying this car, let alone it uses premium gas only.
Why not? I bet over the life of my car I spend less on the MS3, insurance and fuel consumed than you do on the MS3, Prius, insurance and fuel consumed.
Besides that, not everyone can afford two cars. Some people bought the car because it's a pretty powerful little package that can still be a sedate daily driver for grocery runs and long highway cruises. It's not a damn sports car, it's a practical performance car. That it still puts up pretty good mpg numbers is a selling point. Of course people care about it.
Shift before 3,000 and don't use more than 1/3rd throttle and you'll get better mileage. Stomp it and accelerate hard at WOT and you'll get stupid low mileage.